Social status can mediate effects on the immune system, with profound consequences for individual health; nevertheless, most investigators of status-related disparities in free-ranging animals have used faecal parasite burdens to proxy immune function in the males of male-dominant species. We instead use direct measures of innate immune function (complement and natural antibodies) to examine status-related immunocompetence in both sexes of a female-dominant species. The meerkat is a unique model for such a study because it is a cooperatively breeding species in which status-related differences are extreme, evident in reproductive skew, morphology, behaviour, communication and physiology, including that dominant females naturally express the...
In cooperative breeders, aggression from dominant breeders directed at subordinates may raise subord...
Additional results about the relationship between social and reproductive status and FAM concentrati...
There is increasing evidence that some vertebrates can adjust their growth rate in relation to chang...
Social status can mediate effects on the immune system, with profound consequences for individual h...
The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis posits that androgens in males can be a ‘double-edged sword...
The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis posits that androgens in males can be a ‘double-edged sword...
The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis posits that androgens in males can be a ‘double-edged sword...
Female intrasexual competition can be intense in cooperatively breeding species, with some dominant ...
In vertebrates, reproductive endocrine concentrations are strongly differentiated by sex, with andro...
In male vertebrates, androgens are inextricably linked to reproduction, social dominance, and aggres...
In male vertebrates, androgens are inextricably linked to reproduction, social dominance, and aggres...
Social rank can profoundly affect many aspects of mammalian reproduction and stress physiology, but ...
Social rank can profoundly affect many aspects of mammalian reproduction and stress physiology, but ...
Social rank can profoundly affect many aspects of mammalian reproduction and stress physiology, but ...
Sexual dimorphism in immune function is a common pattern in vertebrates and also in a number of inve...
In cooperative breeders, aggression from dominant breeders directed at subordinates may raise subord...
Additional results about the relationship between social and reproductive status and FAM concentrati...
There is increasing evidence that some vertebrates can adjust their growth rate in relation to chang...
Social status can mediate effects on the immune system, with profound consequences for individual h...
The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis posits that androgens in males can be a ‘double-edged sword...
The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis posits that androgens in males can be a ‘double-edged sword...
The immunocompetence handicap hypothesis posits that androgens in males can be a ‘double-edged sword...
Female intrasexual competition can be intense in cooperatively breeding species, with some dominant ...
In vertebrates, reproductive endocrine concentrations are strongly differentiated by sex, with andro...
In male vertebrates, androgens are inextricably linked to reproduction, social dominance, and aggres...
In male vertebrates, androgens are inextricably linked to reproduction, social dominance, and aggres...
Social rank can profoundly affect many aspects of mammalian reproduction and stress physiology, but ...
Social rank can profoundly affect many aspects of mammalian reproduction and stress physiology, but ...
Social rank can profoundly affect many aspects of mammalian reproduction and stress physiology, but ...
Sexual dimorphism in immune function is a common pattern in vertebrates and also in a number of inve...
In cooperative breeders, aggression from dominant breeders directed at subordinates may raise subord...
Additional results about the relationship between social and reproductive status and FAM concentrati...
There is increasing evidence that some vertebrates can adjust their growth rate in relation to chang...